| Literature DB >> 28546650 |
Katarzyna Nowak1,2, Kirsten Wimberger3, Shane A Richards4, Russell A Hill1, Aliza le Roux2.
Abstract
Wild species use habitats that vary in risk across space and time. This risk can derive from natural predators and also from direct and indirect human pressures. A starving forager will often take risks that a less hungry forager would not. At a highly seasonal and human-modified site, we predicted that arboreal samango monkeys (Cercopithecus albogularis labiatus) would show highly flexible, responsive, risk-sensitive foraging. We first determined how monkeys use horizontal and vertical space across seasons to evaluate if high-risk decisions (use of gardens and ground) changed with season, a proxy for starvation risk. Then, during a subsequent winter, we offered equal feeding opportunities (in the form of high-value, raw peanuts) in both gardens and forest to see if this short-term change in food availability and starvation risk affected monkeys' foraging decisions. We found that during the food-scarce winter, monkeys foraged outside indigenous forest and in gardens, where they fed on exotic species, especially fallen acorns (Quercus spp.), despite potential threats from humans. Nevertheless, and as predicted, when given the choice of foraging on high-value foods in gardens vs. forest during our artificial foraging experiment, monkeys showed a preference for a safer forest habitat. Our experiment also indicated monkeys' sensitivity to risk in the lower vertical strata of both habitats, despite their previous extensive use of the ground. Our findings support one of the central tenets of optimal foraging theory: that risk of starvation and sensitivity to the variation in food availability can be as important drivers of behavior as risk of predation.Entities:
Keywords: Cercopithecus mitis; Giving-up density; Guenon; Human disturbance; Landscape of Fear
Year: 2016 PMID: 28546650 PMCID: PMC5422488 DOI: 10.1007/s10764-016-9913-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Primatol ISSN: 0164-0291 Impact factor: 2.264
Fig. 1Polygons represent monkeys’ maximum and core ranges (100 % and 50 % isopleths) for each season with green (a) =summer, red (b) =autumn, pink (c) =winter, blue (d) =spring. Stars indicate locations of GUD patches that were established at random points generated inside 100 % of the monkeys’ winter range. (Note: the GUD experiment took place only in a subsequent winter.) The grid shows the total annual home range where off-white cells indicate human-modified habitat (including parts of Hogsback village) and light blue indicates indigenous forest
Fig. 2Mean (±95 % CI) proportion of records (N = 13,060 individual scans) collected during 35 days of group follows during which we observed monkeys on the ground, rather than in trees, across seasons
Fig. 3Mean (±95 % CI) GUD (peanuts left uneaten) by height and habitat
Fig. 4Monkeys’ patterns of visitation to GUD trees by habitat over 20 experimental days (data plotted by individual trees or GUD patches with 8 trees/patches per each habitat) showing that monkeys had higher visitation rates to experimental trees inside the forest than in gardens